Saturday, 31 December 2011

For the last blog post of this year, I thought I’d have a quick look back through 2011 and (in the next post tomorrow morning) look ahead to 2012.

This has been the second year of the blog, but I think it’s a year in which things have slowly started to come together a bit on the blogging front for me. First, and most importantly, I’d like to thank everyone who commented, followed, read or just flicked through the pages on the blog. Blogging is a social activity – it’d be no fun if no one read the blog posts – so it’s been really great to see that other people seem to have enjoyed some of the stuff which has been appearing here. I only hope you like what’s coming in 2012!

I also saw that the number of followers has reached 200. So, to all new followers, as well as old friends, WELCOME and thank you all.

As for blog posts, I managed 56 (not including this one), which was double the amount in 2010. It was just about what I thought was realistic in terms of achievable numbers, although looking back there seems to have been a few months where I posted a lot, and some when posting tailed off. I’m hoping for a bit more of an even coverage next year.

The most popular post was “Winter Sports: The Abode of Madness” with 2234 page views. I was a bit puzzled about this, as it wasn’t that different to a lot of the other posts. I have wondered whether it was because it was visited by a large number of blog readers looking for dangerous, insane off-piste skiing and snowboarding. If so, please accept my apologies for the misleading title.

As for exactly what type of blog posts you enjoyed reading, I don’t really know. I think you liked the terrain building articles, the AAR/ battle-reports, the wargames show reports and newer posts like the painting guides. Have no fear, ladies and gentlemen, because there should be lots more to come on all these in 2012. For example, I counted that I’d played 28 wargames in 2011, almost all of them at the St Albans Wargames Club (a.k.a. “Lard Island”), but that I’d not reported most of these. I’ll try and do better in the future ... mea culpa !

It hasn’t been a big year for me purchasing wargames figures. I’ve bought a few, mainly in 10mm for the Great War divisional wargame project we’d intended to start in 2011 but which hasn’t got off the ground so far. In the 28mm, I bought less than 150 figures – although this may well be because I’ve got piles of lead hanging around the garage waiting to be used.

Painting wise, I managed 132 Great War 28mm figures, far fewer than I’d hoped for but the dip was due to three months of making terrain and being busy at work for big chunks of the year. I managed four new terrain boards, each of which took a lot longer than I’d expected.

So, what were my highlights of the year? By a very short head, the leaders would be the Salute and Crisis wargames shows. The best thing about wargames shows is meeting old friends and new, and both of these shows were perfect for that. The games on display were stunning at both shows, and at each show there was a great turn out from my club. The after-show dinner in Antwerp was particularly fun.

The other main highlight, and running in a very close second, would be the TooFatLardies games day back in July when we put on a series of games around Tobruk 1941. That was a terrific day’s gaming (even with my ham-fisted umpiring at times!)

I also got a lot of satisfaction in finishing my Passchendaele wargaming project by the end of the year. It’s good to try and finish something, once in a while ...

Any dark clouds in the year? Yes, one or two, but thankfully pretty small. I never got my camouflage netting right for the artillery position in Glasgow Copse (which is why that never got blogged!). I didn’t even half start a couple of projects I wanted to. I put far less written material on the blog than I’d hoped for. And I’m still trying to finish the Platoon Forward variant for the Great War. Oh well, there’s always next year!

Anyway, with some great memories, old friends and new and some (old and new) projects to turn to again next year, I think I’ll say goodbye to 2011.

Saturday, 24 December 2011

I hope you all have a great Christmas, and have a wonderful day tomorrow! Thanks to everyone for following and commenting so far this year - I've really enjoyed everyone's company. Only a couple of posts left for this year after this one, but I hope you'll join me for those if you can.

Friday, 23 December 2011

A little bit of a blatant plug in this post, but I hope you’ll forgive me. For anyone wanting to know a little more about how my local wargames club went about wargaming Third Ypres and Passchendaele, I’ve written a couple of long-ish articles on the subject for the TooFatLardies Christmas Special 2011 which is published today by my good mates Richard Clarke and Nick Skinner.

The first article, “Passchendaele: the Bitter Victory” starts with looking at some of the challenges in attempting to recreate Third Ypres and Passchendaele through wargaming. I then try and cover the key themes of the campaign, including the evolution of small-unit tactics, the dominance of artillery, military technological developments which influenced the fighting and the critical factors of terrain and weather. The first article ends with the suggested “house rules” we have been working on for our games of “Through the Mud and the Blood” set in Third Ypres.

The second article, “In The Salient”, provides three scenarios. The first, "Gegenangriff", covers a German “spoiling attack” on hastily assembled British positions in late September 1917. The second, “Virtutis Gloria Merces”, follows the attack on Reutel village on 4 October 1917 in which Captain Clement Robertson of the Tank Corps was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. The third scenario, “A spot where only Devils can reign” recreates the Canadian attack on Vine Cottage to the north-west of Passchendaele village on 6 November 1917.

The other contents of the TooFatLardies Christmas Special 2011 are as follows:

The sinking of the Konigsberg. A classic scenario for Bag the Hun

On Patrol. A complete pre-game patrol system for I Ain't Been Shot Mum

A Brief Affair by Charles Eckart of Colorado. Australian troops attack a German held Pacific Island in 1914 with Mud & Blood

An A to Z of Umpiring. Nick Skinner runs through the dos and don'ts of running games.

One off Battles for Let Feu Sacre. Kev Lowth of Hampshire rolls up some scenarios for a quick game

The Capture of Akhalkalak Fortress: Chris Stoesen presents this scenario for Sharp Practice set on the borders of Russia and the Ottoman Empire.

Tom Ballou of Massachusetts gives us some alternative sniper rules for IABSM.

Bridge over the River Urk. Robert Avery of No Fixed Abode heads to the Eastern Front with a Partisan scenario for IABSM.

“The Roundwood Report”. Some more interrogation of Richard Clarke about some of the TooFatLardies’ products by some bloke who has a Blog

Get Fondler. With news of his brother’s death at the hands of a criminal gang, Richard Fondler heads for Gateshead in this gritty Sharp Practice scenario. Avoid tall buildings!

May Madness. Nick Skinner is Tail End Charlie with this scenario for Bag the Hun above the Dunkirk perimeter in 1940. Tally Ho!

I hope you’ll agree that’s a fairly chunky amount of information for the cover price of £6. Although I’m clearly not an impartial judge of TooFatLardies’ publications, I do think it’s good value and since not a penny, cent or euro of the proceeds are heading to Roundwood Towers, I feel I can honestly and with a good conscience tell you to go and buy a copy!

Observant followers of the Blog may realise there's an overlap with the mini-campaign we played at the start of December. There is, but fear not. I hope to have the Campaign Diaries on this Blog at some point over the Christmas and New Year period, together with some other loose ends I've been meaning to finish off.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

Last night, we played the second of our brace of games set in the Ypres Salient in the autumn of 1917.

As I mentioned in my last blog post, this game followed from a pre-game series of emails between the players in the game. The intention was for the decisions made by the players in the pre-game to influence the forces available and the tactics used by the German and British sides during the Tuesday night club wargame and also the precise terrain over which the game was to be fought.

The game played was the most promising of a number of encounters between the British 62 Brigade, part of 21 Division in the British Fourth Army, and the German 14th Reserve Infantry Regiment. The pre-game emails were focused on the British advance against German defences in depth in an area bounded by Jetty Wood to the North, and Juniper Wood and Juniper Cott to the South.

The Objectives

Being part of a pre-game sequence of emails, it was difficult to set the same fixed objectives as I would normally do in a scenario. Each player had stated in their emails what they wanted to achieve by the end of the mini-campaign, but translating that into hard objectives on the tabletop as slightly more challenging. I settled the objectives after discussion with the players – with the British objective being to navigate along the road from Polygon Wood to Reutel village (which ran across the North edge of the table, and for the Germans to prevent this happening).

The Terrain
The terrain over which Third Ypres was fought, and the changes to that terrain brought about by changing weather, was critical to the relative successes and failures of British operations in the Ypres Salient. In this context, the images of the flooded, shell-pocked terrain around Broodseinde, Zonnebeke and Passchendaele have become the signatures of the battle (even though at times during the Third Ypres battles large portions of the Salient were dry and dusty). It was therefore straightforward to mention to the players that their use of terrain, and navigation over the battlefield, would be key elements in the wargame.

The south of the table featured the edge of Juniper Wood, which petered out into a couple of isolated copses to the north. Alongside the eat edge of the wood was an artillery bunker, revealed in the first instance to the British players as simply being a reinforced shellhole. The reasoning here was that letters and post-war accounts by Tank Corps crewmen regarding concealed German artillery positions generally seem to have noted that a number of German field gun positions were practically invisible until the tank was very close indeed. I made the artillery Stellung accordingly difficult to spot for the British.

To the east of the table were two German MEBUs, or prefabricated concrete pillboxes. These were a typical feature of the German defences in the Ypres Salient. They proved historically to be a thorn in the side of attacking British and Imperial troops, necessitating a number of different tactics in order to neutralise them. The German player (Elton) has placed these carefully to provide mutual support on the campaign map, and they proved as venomous in the game as their historical counterparts had done. With a certain grim nod to the past, the northern pillbox was named “Scharnhorst”, the southern “Gneisenau”.

The terrain on the table was uniformly stated to be poor, requiring any movement to be at a -1 per pip of each movement dice. There was also the possibility of some of the terrain being abysmally bad, this being determined according to a random roll and reflecting the poor, rainy weather on the previous three days in the pre-game campaign.

The German player was also informed that prior to the start of the game, a creeping barrage had passed over his positions, dislocating his communications with his SOS artillery and causing some casualties in the pillboxes following several Stollenknicker, or large calibre dug-out smashing shells.

The British route of advance was equally testing. The road to Reutel was deemed to have been badly shelled by both sides in the previous days, and was negotiable only with great care. The road ran along the North of the table, but was difficult to follow for any British forces – especially if under fire. Crossing the short distance across the table, a mere 48”, would not be easy.

The Game
The British infantry from “A”Company, 1/Lincoln arrived slowly owing to being stretched out slightly along the road to Reutel (another requirement of a pre-game email from the British players). The first section to arrive occupied a small copse by Juniper Wood, closely followed by the first of a section of Mark IV tanks from “B” Battalion of the Tank Corps.

The pre-game emails had revealed Captain Gustard-Woode to be a most entertaining character. Here’s the description from Panda, the British Tank Corps commander:

“Captain The Honourable Roger Gustard-Woode is part of the landed gentry. His great grandfather had been influential in the development of corn thrashing machines, on the basis of which the family fortune was made. The Captain, like his father, took a keen interest in the workings of the farms and estate, and the introduction of machinery into the working day. It is for this reason he chose the tank instead of the lance, following his keen interest in farming machinery. A keen sportsman, Roger is often seen carrying a hockey stick, a hangover from his university days as First team captain. A rather social chap, his keenness to encourage a corps d’esprit amongst his men can sometimes take precedence over his other duties. However, Roger is rather hands on in terms of the technology at his disposal, and can happily spend hours talking and working alongside his engineers and crews, and often when other duties are to be attended to. Captain Gustard-Woode has chosen to spend time with his crew and their machines, tinkering with their new technology - sometimes to the annoyance of the engineers. In respect of extra equipment, the Captain recognises the importance of clear communications, and therefore has given orders for extra signalling equipment. Pigeons for signalling? No Sir, only for dinner!”

Eminently sensible, and characteristics which were reflected in the Captain’s performance with a couple of “house-rules”. These came in handy because no sooner had Black Prince II clanked its way onto the table than the German Blinds card was drawn, enabling the sharp eyes of Gefreiter Dieter Jaeger of 3rd Battery, 18th Bavarian Foot Artillery Battalion to drag the camouflage and scrim netting from his gun and strike the lumbering tank at long range. Firing his 77mm M1916 field gun after spending an action aiming, Gefreiter Jaeger’s first shot hit Black Prince II, shocking the driver and bringing the tank to a shuddering halt.

Stationary, Black Prince II started to slip into the Flanders mud. History repeated itself. “We travelled literally one foot to each revolution of the tracks”, recalled Second Lieutenant Wilfred Bion at Third Ypres. Panda and the other British players shared his experience and the tank bogged.

Immobile, with tracks revolving slowly into the mud, Black Prince II was a perfect target. Gefreiter Jaeger did not miss. The second shot smashed through the sponson, with Black Prince II catching fire, its crew scrambling out of the door hatch

Six of the eight crew, and Captain Gustard-Woode made the exit, gathering as an informal section by the now-blazing tank, thick black smoke enulfing the scene. One gunner had the presence of mind to drag out a spare Lewis gun from one of the sponsons before the fire engulfed the “bus”, and quickly deployed the weapon (somewhat ineffectually) against the Scharnhorst pillbox.

By now, British forces were streaming into the field. Brigand II, another male Mark IV tank commanded by First Lieutenant Charles Kimpton, rolled off the pavé road just avoiding Black Prince II and commenced firing with its 6pdr quick firing sponson mounted guns against Scharnhorst.

Its attack at long range was complimented by a swift attack off Blinds by another section of 1/Lincolns, this time with bombs at close range.

Keeping out of the arc of fire of a German maxim MG08 heavy machine gun in Gneisenau, the British bombers infiltrated to the rear of Scharnhorst and routed a defending section of German infantry guarding the entrances to the pill box.

With the Stellungbattalionkämpfer guards routed, the remaining bombers threw grenades into the rear of Scharnhorst. No quarter was asked, and none was given. As historically, the fighting had taken a bitter, cruel turn.

Gefreiter Hans Fassbinder, seeing the British bombers capturing Scharnhorst and frustrated by the narrow firing angle of Gneisenau’s embrasure, urged his crew to drag the Maxim heavy machine gun to the roof of the pillbox. The arc of fire was greater, and soon Gefreiter Fassbinder was directing withering fire against British forces on the north of the table.

The fire cut through both a British section and also the remaining crew of Black Prince II, but not before captain Gustard-Woode had gallantly rapped on the side of Brigand II with his hockey stick and demanded entrance to carry on the assault. He now led the remaining three tanks of his section, Brigand II which was now accompanied by two females – Belladonna and Banshee. More infantry was arriving, still in somewhat of a piecemeal fashion, as 1/Lincoln’s “A” Company headquarters deployed on the board together with First Lieutenant Percy Grantham.

By now the combined firepower of the “B” Battalion tanks was causing problems for the occupants of Gneisenau and also the artillery Stellung in the south of the board. Gefreiter Jaeger’s artillery crew has suffered two fatalities under Brigand II’s 6 pdr guns, with a strafing run by an RFC close support SE5 adding to the German discomfort.

While the German players attempted to rally their forces ….

… another British section waded through flooded shell-holes to pepper Gneisenau and it’s defenders with rifle grenades

As Captain Gustard-Woode rolled his tanks forward, even at one point navigating on foot before Brigand II, the German reinforcements arriving through Juniper Wood came too late.

Not even the presence of two high-quality German snipers, relocated by the German players from their reserves to the south of Juniper Wood, and the arrival of two additional sections of high quality trench cleaners under Major Ulrich von Bek, the local kampftruppenkommandeur, could stop the British forces getting close enough to an exit to call the morning’s attack for the British.

The Aftermath
So, there we have it. A larger, and more complicated, game than last weeks which I found much more challenging to umpire at a good pace. The duel between the tanks and artillery see-sawed dramatically in the two hours of the game. What seemed at first to be a withering fire by the German field artillery against stationary bogged-down British tanks son became a far more erratic sniping as crew casualties impaired the loading time and accuracy of Gefreiter Jaeger’s gun Bavarian crew.

The players seemed to feel that the pre-game emails had been worthwhile, and that they had set the scene for each of the games. This helped save time on the two nights we played, as well as helping to orientate players who were not very familiar with Third Ypres or the Great War in general.

Next, I hope to post up the pre-game/ mini-campaign emails and some notes for both the games. I always enjoy reading those sorts of things and I think from some of the previous comments that some of you may like that as well. Hopefully I can post them this coming weekend.